Social media can be a dangerous pastime for medical professionals

You have probably seen the “news” reports in the past two days of a naked Prince Harry having a good time in Las Vegas. These clandestine photos were obviously taken when Prince Harry believed that  he was in a private setting. However, they were secretly released to the press and quickly went viral to the great embarrassment of the Royal Family.

You may wonder what this has to do with physicians and the medical profession? We are now in a world where virtually everyone is carrying a camera/video camera on their phones with the ability to take and upload photos and videos to the internet and to the world in moments.  Behaviour that professionals may have engaged in that they thought was private may now be published to the world.

I have not seen a case yet where the Ohio Medical Board uses video footage of a physician “acting badly” as evidence of impairment or inability to practice medicine, however, in my opinion it is just a matter of time. Physicians need to be aware that the Medical Board can take an action against a physician for their conduct, even if it is not related to the practice of medicine. You do not need to be “falling down drunk” at work to be disciplined by the Medical Board. A photo or video of you clearly impaired at a bar taken at 2am when you are scheduled for surgery at 7am could serve as the basis for discipline.

Social media can also be evidence of a boundary violation with a patient. Do you “friend” patients on Facebook? Do you have photos of yourself and a patient taken in social settings? These could all constitute boundary violations with patients.

Social media can be a wonderful tool to reconnect with old friends and to share photos with family members and friends. But, it can also lead to trouble for professionals if not used wisely. As physicians, your conduct needs to be professional 24/7.

As always, if you have any questions about this post or about the State Medical Board in general, please feel to contact me at 614-486-3909 or email me at beth@collislaw.com.

Are you resilient enough to be a physician?

As most physicians will tell you, it takes a lot more than understanding chemistry or being a good test taker to be a good physician. It takes being willing to work hard, being able to face adversity, and staying calm in a crisis situation. It takes being resilient.  I often wonder if medical students and medical residents are being challenged and taught the appropriate skills to be an accomplished physician.

In my practice, I represent physicians who are being investigated by the State Medical Board.  I also regularly represent residents who face discipline in their residency program or who are seeking licensure for the first time.  For most of my clients, an investigation in their practice by the State Medical Board may be the first time they have ever been questioned by a person in authority or “called on the carpet” for their actions.   Based on this new experience, it is interesting how they react.

A Board investigation is an incredibly stressful time for the physician. Their entire professional livelihood is on the line and any discipline that is imposed by the Board will have significant ramifications to their job, hospital credentialing status, third-party payor status, board certifications and may affect other state licenses.

Investigations by the State Medical Board do not have a statute of limitations and, once the Board starts an investigation, it is not limited to just the scope of the complaint.  The Board may review all aspects of the physician’s practice. In addition, while conducting an investigation, the Board can order the physician to undergo a chemical dependency evaluation or a mental or medical evaluation to determine if they have a condition that may affect their ability to practice medicine.

In order to get through a Medical Board investigation, the physician needs to be patient, cooperative and still maintain the same level of professionalism in their practice while seeing patients. This calls for resiliency on the part of the physician.

Physicians hold patients’ lives in their hands. They need the intelligence, executive function skills, and downright grit to maintain their composure in an ever-changing medical field. So, before entering medicine or if you are a practicing physician, I think it is important to consider .. are you resilient enough to be a physician?

As always, if you have any questions about this post or the State Medical Board of Ohio, please feel free to contact me at (614) 486-3909 or email me at beth@collislaw.com.

Did you move? Notify the Medical Board of your change of address

If you hold a medical license in the State of Ohio, you are required to notify the State Medical Board of Ohio of any change in your address. This can be done in a number of ways:

1) Go to the following link:http://med.ohio.gov/pdf/OnLineChangeOfAddress.pdf

2) Contacting the CME/Records section of the Medical Board at 614-644-1464 and providing the Board with your change of address; or

3) Go on-line to www.license.ohio.gov and choose the “change address” option to change your address on-line.

Once you change your address, check back to the Board website after about 72 hours to verify that your change of address was properly recorded.

Why is it so important to make sure the Medical Board has your most up to date contact information? If the Board has any questions or concerns that need to be addressed by you, it will send the information to your “address of record”. If you are the subject of an investigation or if you are subjected to a random CME audit, the letters of inquiry will be sent to your address of record.

It is important to note, you are generally provided with a short period of time (generally 30 days) to respond to Board inquiries. Failure to respond may result in an adverse action against your license. For example, in a disciplinary proceeding, if you are notified by mail that the Board proposes to take a disciplinary action against your license for an alleged violation of the Medical Practice Act, under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 119, you have thirty (30) day from the date the notice was MAILED to you to request a hearing. If you fail to request a hearing in a timely manner, the Medical Board will take a disciplinary action (including possibly a suspension or revocation of your license) without considering your side of the story.

In addition, if the Medical Board takes a disciplinary action against a licensee and the Board is unable to provide the licensee with a copy of the final Adjudication Order (ie. if the Board does not have your current address) then the Board is required to PUBLISH the disciplinary action in your local newspaper.

It only takes a minute. You should check with the Board at www.license.ohio.gov to verify that the Board has your current address. If it doesn’t, please follow the prompts listed above to update your address with the Board.

As always, if you have any questions about this post or about the State Medical Board in general, please feel free to contact me at (614) 486-3909 or email me at beth@collislaw.com.

On probation with the Medical Board? Beware .. there is a new sheriff in town

Physicians who are on probation with the State Medical Board of Ohio related to alcohol or chemical dependency or abuse are generally required to submit to monitoring conditions during probation, including submitting to random urine drug tests, attending weekly AA meetings, completing 104 aftercare sessions, attending quarterly Board appearances,  and having a physician monitor their practice.

In the past, as long as a physician on probation did not have a positive alcohol screen, i.e. illegal substance or prescription medication without  a valid prescription, the Board generally did not always require perfect compliance with all other probationary terms. Again, generally,if a physician failed to submit a quarterly declarations of compliance or failed to attend all required AA meetings, the Board would customarily  address the issue at their quarterly meeting or would send the physician a “friendly” letter advising them that they were not in compliance and requesting that steps be taken to ensure compliance.

Under the direction of former Board Member, Mr. Albert, the Board rarely charged a probationer with failure to comply with the terms of their Consent Agreement, unless they tested positive for drugs or alcohol.  Most recently, however, the Board has taken a much stricter position on probationers who are not 100% in compliance with ALL the terms in their Board Orders or Consent Agreements.

Recently, the Medical Board issued a Notice of Opportunity for Hearing to a physician who had been on probation with the Board since 2005.  Despite the fact that all of the physician’s urine screens were negative, the Board proposed to discipline the physician for allegedly failing to comply with the following terms of the physician’s Consent Agreement: failure to submit quarterly reports to the Board in a timely manner; failure to submit AA logs to the Board; failure to seek Board approval for required courses and for a monitoring physician. Despite no evidence of relapse, the Board voted at its June meeting to revoke this physician’s medical license for failure to be 100% in compliance with the Board’s Order or Consent Agreement.

If you are under probation, please beware. The terms and conditions of Board Orders or Consent Agreements are mandatory. Failure to strictly comply with all terms and conditions of the Board Order or Consent Agreement can serve as the basis for further Board disciplinary action.

As always, if you have any questions regarding this post or the State Medical Board in general, please feel free to contact me at 614-486-3909 or email me at beth@collislaw.com.

Do you really need to wear your scrubs everywhere?

I usually try to write on topics related to the State Medical Board of Ohio and issues or problems that can lead to discipline by the Medical Board. Occasionally, however, I will write on a topic that I just find curious for medical professionals. Today, the issue relates to why many medical professionals wear their scrubs out of the hospital?

I have tried to figure out the whole, scrubs as casual wear issue. It makes sense to see medical professionals around the hospital or on the hospital grounds in their scrubs. I don’t find it unusual to see health care professionals grabbing a quick-lunch in their scrubs. However, the wearing of scrubs has gone way beyond that.   Is the rationale for wearing the scrubs that “I could be called to the hospital at any minute, so I need to be prepared?” This might be it. However, yesterday, I saw someone cutting their grass in their scrubs! I hope they don’t wear that same outfit into the hospital if they are immediately called in for an emergency.

My father was a practicing anesthesiologist for over forty years. He left the house before 6am in a suit and tie and returned late each evening in a suit and tie. I can’t say that I ever saw him in scrubs. He certainly never went to dinner or cut the grass in scrubs.

Now, some may ask, “who cares what medical professionals wear”?  While I agree that we live in a much more casual society than even 20 years ago, I do believe that it decreases the level of professionalism and respect for the profession when medical professionals are constantly wearing their “hospital uniform” outside of the work setting. Just something to consider.

(Wearing scrubs out of the hospital, even to cut your grass will NOT lead to discipline by the State Medical Board of Ohio.)

As always, if you have any questions about this post or about the State Medical Board in general, please feel free to contact me at 614-486-3909 or email me at beth@collislaw.com.

Do you have balance in your life?

Doctors …. do you have balance in your life?

In the past, I have written about the three main areas where the State Medical Board in Ohio takes disciplinary actions against physicians: (1) for submitting false information to the Board, (2) for violating a professional boundary with a patient and (3) for issues related to drugs or alcohol (see previous post entitled, “What the Medical Board Really Cares About – Sex, Drugs and Lies”).  Recently, I looked at many of the cases before the Medical Board to determine if there are similar warning signs or red flags that may have been present before a complaint is filed with the Board. What I found is that in many instances the physician had been living a life that is out of balance.

Physicians are trained to look for signs of health (or disease) in their patients, however, too often they do not look for those warning signs in themselves. I often see that the complaint with the Medical Board is just the “final straw” in a year (or years) of a physician living an unbalanced life.  I find that, in many cases, physicians are overworked, overweight, stressed out, and living meaningless and angst filled lives. Many are taking medications to help them sleep and then other medications to help them get through their work days. Many eat out too often, haven’t seen the inside of a gym in ages (or ever), and are living meaningless, spiritless lives.

In terms of boundary violations, they rarely happen  to physicians who are in loving, supportive marriages or relationships. Many times, a physician will find themselves immersed in a Medical Board investigation when they are also in the middle of an ugly divorce or professional partnership that has taken a turn for the worst.

As physicians, you worked hard in school to put yourself in a position where you would have choices. Choices about where you work and what type of work you would like to engage in on a daily basis. Now is the time to exercise those choices and put yourself in a work environment that you find interesting, fulfilling and enjoyable.

I recently read that in tough financial times many people start to step back from their jobs (or job searches) and consider what they can do to make their overall lives better. Many have found that by spending more time with family and friends, exercising more often, and taking “control” of their lives they have found the energy and spirit to be more successful in work or in their job searches. Despite the tough economy, gym memberships were up in 2011 and many more people participated in Weight Watchers and other programs to improve the overall quality of their lives.

Doctors … look at your lives. Are you healthy, happy and fulfilled? If not, now if the time to reclaim your life and the direction of your professional career.

As always, if you have any questions about this post or about the State Medical Board of Ohio in general, please feel free to email me at beth@collislaw.com or call me at 614-486-3909.

Physician/patient relationship = power imbalance

The State Medical Board of Ohio addressed two cases at its March meeting concerning the physician-patient relationship.  http://www.med.ohio.gov/pdf/Agenda/Agenda%20-2012/03-12agenda.pdf

In one case, the Medical Board suspended the license of a physician for 180 days after a hearing based on the finding that the physician had engaged in a sexual relationship with an indigent patient after providing the patient with “free” medical care and “free” medicine. From the physician’s perspective, she honestly believed that she was providing a medical service to the patient that he could not otherwise afford and that she should not then be “punished” for providing this care.   The physician did not comprehend that having a personal (read: sexual) relationship with the patient violated the physician/patient relationship.  Regardless of the fact that the medical care provided to the patient without charge, a physician-patient relationship was created.  The Board suspended the physician’s license for 180 days for the boundary violation.

In the second case, the State’s attorney offered for Board approval a Consent Agreement  for a physician who had engaged in a sexual relationship with a patient, which proposed to impose no active suspension on the physician’s license. The rationale given by the State’s attorney for no suspension was the fact that the patient was also the corporate attorney for the medical practice and therefore the legal staff did not believe that there was the same imbalance of power between the physician and the patient that usually leads to physician discipline. The state’s attorney argued that the physician and attorney/patient were on a more even footing.  The state’s attorney argued there was no imbalance of power and consequently no suspension should be imposed on the physician’s license.

The Board members did not agree with this argument. In a rarely seen move by the Board, the proposed Consent Agreement, was rejected by the Board.  While this is a very unusual fact pattern, it clearly shows the Board believes strongly about the inherent imbalance of power in a physician-patient relationship.

As always, if you have any questions about this post or about the medical board in general, please feel free to call me at 614-486-3909 or email me at beth@collislaw.com.

What the Medical Board really cares about – sex, drugs & lies

Today is the State Medical Board of Ohio’s monthly Board meeting. It is always scheduled for the second Wednesday of the month. Decisions on disciplinary actions are always scheduled on the 1pm docket. It is a  cattle call. All disciplinary actions are deliberated and final decisions are voted on in open session. Members of the public, including medical students, and the press are welcome to and do attend.

The first question I am always asked by physicians is “What will get me in trouble with the Medical Board”.  While the Medical Board can discipline a licensee for a wide range of things, there are three areas that seem to be of their highest concern: Sex, Drugs and Lies.

Sex. The Board typically takes disciplinary action against a licensee who has sex with a patient. However, the Board is also concerned with boundary violations with patients. Have you employed a patient in your office or loaned money to a patient or signed a car note or credit card application for a client? The line in the sand between a doctor and a patient should be clear. There should be no overlapping of a doctor/patient relationship and a personal relationship.

Drugs. Nearly half of all disciplinary actions handled by the Medical Board each year involve impaired physicians. Physicians who have been diagnosed with drug or alcohol problems. The Medical Board is also very concerned about the prescribing habits of physicians. Has the physician prescribed to the mother of a patient as opposed to the patient because only the mother has insurance? Has the physician prescribed a controlled substance to a family member?  Has the physician prescribed a drug to a patient for other than legitimate medical purposes?

Lies. The Medical Board does not like to be lied to. If you complete an application and fail to give clear, concise and accurate information to the Board, you will likely face a disciplinary action. Similarly, if you are the subject of discipline by another state and fail to tell the Ohio Board, you will likely be subject to discipline in Ohio not just for the “sister state discipline” but also for failing to disclose the action to the Ohio Board.

At the Board meeting today, the Board will consider final discipline in four cases. One involves practicing below the standard of care in the prescribing of medications to four patients that also resulted in felony and misdemeanor convictions; two cases relate to alcohol abuse or addiction and relapse and one involves an inappropriate sexual relationship with a patient. http://www.med.ohio.gov/pdf/Agenda/Agenda%20-2012/03-12agenda.pdf

Off to the meeting….

As always, if you have any questions about this post or about the State Medical Board of Ohio, feel free to email me at beth@collislaw.com or call me at 614-486-3909. I look forward to your questions.

Ohio Medical Board’s One Bite Rule

Physicians who believe they need to seek medical treatment for drug or alcohol abuse are often concerned about the ramifications they may suffer by the State Medical Board of Ohio if it is determined that they do need treatment. They commonly want to know, “will the treatment be confidential?” or “will the treatment facility or their colleagues and employer who may know of their impairment be required to report them to the Medical Board?”

Physicians who believe they may need treatment should seek an assessment immediately. Your health is the most important consideration.   However, in seeking an assessment for suspected chemical dependency or substance abuse, it is important to submit to an evaluation at one of the State Medical Board of Ohio approved facilities. A list of the facilities approved by the Medical Board can be found at: http://www.med.ohio.gov/pdf/treatment_compliance/TREATMNT.pdf

It is imperative that you seek an evaluation and follow the treatment recommendation of the Medical Board approved treatment facility. Seeking an assessment or treatment at a non-Medical Board approved facility will NOT be accepted by the Medical Board and you will be required to repeat the treatment.  However, if you voluntarily seek treatment and follow the recommendations of an approved treatment facility, you may be able to avail yourself to the Medical Board’s ONE BITE policy.

What is One-Bite?   The One Bite rule allows impaired licensees who seek and complete treatment and aftercare at a Medical Board approved treatment provider to remain in the private sector for monitoring, as long as their acts did not result in a criminal conviction or put patients or others at risk of harm:

Within One Bite:

  • Alcohol only
  • Illegal drug use
  • Taking drugs from sources that did not involve patients
  • Issuing prescriptions for one’s own use in one’s own name

Outside of One Bite:

  • Criminal conviction related to use or abuse of a controlled substance at or near the time the Board is determining if they meet the requirements for One Bite
  • Treatment in lieu
  • Relapse
  • Failure to complete appropriate treatment and aftercare with a Board approved provider
  • Criminal acts that involve the use of another’s name or involve patient’s name
  • Compromised patient care
  • Out of state action

If the Board becomes involved by investigator contact with the licensee or the Board orders the licensee for an assessment the individual no longer qualifies for One Bite.  One Bite is basically ONE chance to voluntarily seek treatment for substance abuse without having to submit to monitoring by the Medical Board.

Are hospitals and colleagues required to report the suspected impaired physician to the Medical Board? Under Ohio R.C. 4731.224 (http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/4731.224) and O.A.C. 4731-15-01 (http://codes.ohio.gov/oac/4731-15-01) licensees and health care facilities are relieved of the obligation to report the impaired physician to the Medical Board IF the individual has sought treatment at a Medical Board approved facility.

As always, if you have further questions, feel free contact me at beth@collislaw.com or at 614-486-3909.